My heart skips a beat.
White toes look fresh. no?
Oh yes. (Taken with instagram)
Pseudo Snow
From the way they hyped it, you would have thought that Saturday would bring our first big snow of 2012. I headed out to Newton suited up for another snowy run, ready to hit 16 miles with Sherée.
Lies, I say.
It flurried. It misted. It was generally overcast, unseasonably balmy and oddly muggy - but there was no snow to speak of.
This week, Coach Rick changed up our route, sending us inbound on Beacon first; this resulted in a substantial climb right at the start of our run. Since Sherée and I often take four (or five or six) miles to really find our rhythm, this was a challenge. We settled in on the downhill, picked a run/walk schedule (nine minutes running, one minute walking, which though I know is often scoffed at, is a huge help in breaking up the longer mileage and maintaining efficient form) and kept things comfortable.
We maybe even had a bit too much fun? (Nah.)
I was nervous about this run. I had not covered 16+ miles since my fairly disastrous September marathon attempt, and I had neglected to restock my supply of applesauce. Our afternoon plans included a 3pm birthday party, so time constraints were in play. I was running with a backpack for the first time in a long time to carry extra layers for a post-run grocery stop.
Around Mile 11, I headed for home while Sherée continued over the back of Heartbreak Hill. Around Mile 12, I was suddenly ravenous, and stopped for a donut. Around Mile 14, I hit a not-entirely-surprising but surmountable wall (14.5 was, after all, my longest run thus far) and was really missing the company of an optimistic running buddy.
Around Mile 16, I arrived at Whole Foods, thirsty and starving – exactly the wrong time to shop for groceries. After one of three overloaded grocery bags tore waiting for the T, I called Jack to rescue me; even with his help, that walk up our hill with groceries might have been more mentally difficult than any step of my run. I felt dangerously close to sitting down on the not-snowy sidewalk and pouting until V8 and a banana appeared and my food magicked its way home.
I’ve mentioned before that the threshold of 13 miles is intimidating, and it is – every cycle, when reaching the point of running a half marathon on an insignificant day “for fun,” there is a moment of hesitation, and then, you move on. At this point, despite that moment, I’m happy enough to shrug off the hesitation, right up until a scheduled run over 15 miles. Sweet Sixteen somehow carries a different weight – six weeks to taper, two months to race day, a run only four miles shy of my longest scheduled training and only 10 miles shy of a marathon. Sweet Sixteen is where ice baths become a welcome consideration, where forgetting fuel can become problematic and where entire weekend days can feel lost on the road.
And so, we have arrived.
TL,DR: Sweet sixteen.